Domain: mccullagh.org
Stories and comments across the archive that link to mccullagh.org.
Comments · 61
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A photographer's defense of analogUnless they're wire service photogs with already-past deadlines, serious photographers still use analog. I spent last weekend traveling with President Clinton, and there were precious few photographers on the press plane with digital cameras.
There are many reasons for this, most of which I covered in a Wired article last December.
Eventually digital will catch up, and it is an at-least-theoretically-unnecessary-and-definitely
- costly pain to develop and scan in slides and negatives. But digital still isn't there yet.Some examples, from my personal photo site:
Images that would be very difficult to replicate in digital:
portrait
nude -
A photographer's defense of analogUnless they're wire service photogs with already-past deadlines, serious photographers still use analog. I spent last weekend traveling with President Clinton, and there were precious few photographers on the press plane with digital cameras.
There are many reasons for this, most of which I covered in a Wired article last December.
Eventually digital will catch up, and it is an at-least-theoretically-unnecessary-and-definitely
- costly pain to develop and scan in slides and negatives. But digital still isn't there yet.Some examples, from my personal photo site:
Images that would be very difficult to replicate in digital:
portrait
nude -
A photographer's defense of analogUnless they're wire service photogs with already-past deadlines, serious photographers still use analog. I spent last weekend traveling with President Clinton, and there were precious few photographers on the press plane with digital cameras.
There are many reasons for this, most of which I covered in a Wired article last December.
Eventually digital will catch up, and it is an at-least-theoretically-unnecessary-and-definitely
- costly pain to develop and scan in slides and negatives. But digital still isn't there yet.Some examples, from my personal photo site:
Images that would be very difficult to replicate in digital:
portrait
nude -
A photographer's defense of analogUnless they're wire service photogs with already-past deadlines, serious photographers still use analog. I spent last weekend traveling with President Clinton, and there were precious few photographers on the press plane with digital cameras.
There are many reasons for this, most of which I covered in a Wired article last December.
Eventually digital will catch up, and it is an at-least-theoretically-unnecessary-and-definitely
- costly pain to develop and scan in slides and negatives. But digital still isn't there yet.Some examples, from my personal photo site:
Images that would be very difficult to replicate in digital:
portrait
nude -
A photographer's defense of analogUnless they're wire service photogs with already-past deadlines, serious photographers still use analog. I spent last weekend traveling with President Clinton, and there were precious few photographers on the press plane with digital cameras.
There are many reasons for this, most of which I covered in a Wired article last December.
Eventually digital will catch up, and it is an at-least-theoretically-unnecessary-and-definitely
- costly pain to develop and scan in slides and negatives. But digital still isn't there yet.Some examples, from my personal photo site:
Images that would be very difficult to replicate in digital:
portrait
nude -
A photographer's defense of analogUnless they're wire service photogs with already-past deadlines, serious photographers still use analog. I spent last weekend traveling with President Clinton, and there were precious few photographers on the press plane with digital cameras.
There are many reasons for this, most of which I covered in a Wired article last December.
Eventually digital will catch up, and it is an at-least-theoretically-unnecessary-and-definitely
- costly pain to develop and scan in slides and negatives. But digital still isn't there yet.Some examples, from my personal photo site:
Images that would be very difficult to replicate in digital:
portrait
nude -
A photographer's defense of analogUnless they're wire service photogs with already-past deadlines, serious photographers still use analog. I spent last weekend traveling with President Clinton, and there were precious few photographers on the press plane with digital cameras.
There are many reasons for this, most of which I covered in a Wired article last December.
Eventually digital will catch up, and it is an at-least-theoretically-unnecessary-and-definitely
- costly pain to develop and scan in slides and negatives. But digital still isn't there yet.Some examples, from my personal photo site:
Images that would be very difficult to replicate in digital:
portrait
nude -
A photographer's defense of analogUnless they're wire service photogs with already-past deadlines, serious photographers still use analog. I spent last weekend traveling with President Clinton, and there were precious few photographers on the press plane with digital cameras.
There are many reasons for this, most of which I covered in a Wired article last December.
Eventually digital will catch up, and it is an at-least-theoretically-unnecessary-and-definitely
- costly pain to develop and scan in slides and negatives. But digital still isn't there yet.Some examples, from my personal photo site:
Images that would be very difficult to replicate in digital:
portrait
nude -
A photographer's defense of analogUnless they're wire service photogs with already-past deadlines, serious photographers still use analog. I spent last weekend traveling with President Clinton, and there were precious few photographers on the press plane with digital cameras.
There are many reasons for this, most of which I covered in a Wired article last December.
Eventually digital will catch up, and it is an at-least-theoretically-unnecessary-and-definitely
- costly pain to develop and scan in slides and negatives. But digital still isn't there yet.Some examples, from my personal photo site:
Images that would be very difficult to replicate in digital:
portrait
nude -
A photographer's defense of analogUnless they're wire service photogs with already-past deadlines, serious photographers still use analog. I spent last weekend traveling with President Clinton, and there were precious few photographers on the press plane with digital cameras.
There are many reasons for this, most of which I covered in a Wired article last December.
Eventually digital will catch up, and it is an at-least-theoretically-unnecessary-and-definitely
- costly pain to develop and scan in slides and negatives. But digital still isn't there yet.Some examples, from my personal photo site:
Images that would be very difficult to replicate in digital:
portrait
nude -
A photographer's defense of analogUnless they're wire service photogs with already-past deadlines, serious photographers still use analog. I spent last weekend traveling with President Clinton, and there were precious few photographers on the press plane with digital cameras.
There are many reasons for this, most of which I covered in a Wired article last December.
Eventually digital will catch up, and it is an at-least-theoretically-unnecessary-and-definitely
- costly pain to develop and scan in slides and negatives. But digital still isn't there yet.Some examples, from my personal photo site:
Images that would be very difficult to replicate in digital:
portrait
nude